Til beskyttelse av utenlandspensjonistenes rettigheter iht.norsk lov samt demokrati for verdens befolkning.
For the protection of overseas pensioners rights in accordance with the Norwegian Constitution as
well as democracy for all citizens. WE ARE TOTALLY AGAINST TTIP and The New World Order. NWO

The Otium Post

05/05/2015

VICE-CHANCELLOR Sigmar Gabriel ´Let’s Stick Together´

Let’s Stick Together

Sigmar Gabriel|July 31, 2014

VICE-CHANCELLOR Gabriel on Germany’s responsibilities

Sigmar Gabriel during his speech - Axel Springer Journalist Club

When we talk about freedom and human rights and how to defend or
revive them in real instances, then amid all the threats and shocks we
see today, policy, the media and business need a space where they are
firmly anchored. Only when one’s viewpoint is clear can one gain a
perspective on conflicts such as that in Ukraine today.

For decades, one term represented this anchor for policy and its
standpoint in the democratic world: “the West.” Transatlantic relations,
and especially between Germany and the US and Canada, the NATO alliance
and the European Union, were an expression of the common ground shared
by states and regions that felt they belonged to “the West.”

The pledges of “the West”
They considered themselves part of a community of values that wanted
to be more than a shared economic or geostrategic alliance. “The West”
espoused the universal promise of freedom and equality for the
individual, respect for human rights and the right of democratic
participation, protected by written or unwritten constitutions and the
rule of law. For the great majority of its states and citizens, the
community of values of “the West” was for a long time a relatively
steady political and cultural compass. In recent years we have been
rocked by a considerable number of international crises that were unable
to harm Germany’s economic prosperity. No one talks anymore about the
once proverbial “German angst”.

Still, alongside this image a new counter-image of new insecurities now
exists that cannot be blurred by German growth statistics. Since the
collapse of the financial markets the Eurozone, and with it the European
Union, has been subjected to an unprecedented political test of the
limits of European solidarity. The core of the Union is developing
unmistakable cracks as destabilization along the European periphery
advances. Syria has descended into a hellish civil war with many
thousands of people killed and millions displaced. Every day in Iraq we
see the consequences of a US intervention that broke international law
and the subsequent pullout. The Middle East, always religiously and
nationalistically incendiary, sees limited truces but no durable peace.
Turkey, meanwhile, is torn between the participatory demands of a
protesting generation and the desire for social peace. Ever since the
revelations of Edward Snowden – at the latest – we have also known that,
in an alliance with internationally active intelligence services,
private-sector data monopolists have been working to compromise private
citizens’ control over their own information. The ability to completely
know and monitor the individual was long a dark genre of literature
before approaching reality in the 21st century.

Fundamental questions
The far greater consequence has been, however, that our fundamental
political values have been called into question: of refraining from the
use of force, of the inviolability of borders, of resolving conflict
through negotiation and de-escalation, and finally of freedom and human
rights. In union and allied with other Europeans we must take seriously
what is taking place in Europe and its vicinity.
All this has become vividly apparent ever since the good news from the
Maidan in Kiev – that the firing upon demonstrators had stopped, a
democratic constitution was again in force and elections held – has been
replaced by concerns that military confrontation is continuing.
Seemingly all at once we have been torn from our observer’s perch into a
long-simmering and suddenly explosive conflict that is now demanding a
price from Germany in the form of sanctions against Russia.

At its core the issue is what should constitute order for the states of
Eastern Europe and what model we can offer to other regions neighboring
the European Union. Ukraine’s current ordeal, as well as those in other
conflicts in the European neighborhood, ultimately pits civil rights and
the rule of law against allegiance to an ethnic, sectarian or
linguistic community.

It has always been easy to counterpoise “the West” against the rest of
the world culturally. Although what’s at stake is not any claim to
dominion by a geographically regional culture that would tell others
what to do, but the opposite: the universal validity of an entitlement
for all humanity to political freedom and self-determination. That is
also precisely why the scandalously unlawful practices of the NSA and
the conduct of big Internet corporations striving for complete access to
personal data are violations of the Western community of values. That
is also why Big Money’s ruthless pursuit of privilege in a system of
deregulated financial markets undermines the rule of law in Western
states. That is why a Europe that sees itself as only a forced
collective under a common currency remains far removed from its true
goals. Because it has come to symbolize much more than culture or
geopolitics, “the West” has not outlived its usefulness.

A partnership of convenience?
The universal nature of its principles lends power to its message
that the individual’s human rights are inviolable. In today’s dangers
and shocks, policy needs a place where it can anchor. Germany is not
stuck between two powers. As a democracy our country belongs to an
international community that still upholds the universal promise and
right of political freedom.

That is why we now have to again strengthen this community of values –
not only internally, but also externally. We cannot be indifferent when,
regarding the European conflict over the integrity of Ukraine,
commentators in authoritarian states point out almost mockingly that
“the West” upholds its values only as long as its economic interests
remain untouched. This viewpoint makes clear that we are increasingly
being regarded as an economic partnership of convenience. Europe now has
the chance to demonstrate the opposite. What will change the attitude
towards “the West” is a series of actions: Supporting democrats in
Ukraine economically and politically, investing sustainably and over the
long term in the country’s development and, if needed, being prepared
in the face of continued Russian aggression to give up economic
privileges in our relations with Russia until conflicts on our continent
are again resolved at the negotiating table and the security of all of
Europe’s neighboring states is achieved. It will change our attitude,
since in recent years we too have supplanted the universality of Western
values through the universality of globalized economic thinking and
conduct. And it will change the attitude from the outside toward “the
West” as a partner to be taken seriously that is more than a profit
alliance of cowardly moneybags.

This article is based on a speech held by Sigmar Gabriel during
an event of the JEWISH VOICE hosted by Axel Springer SE in the
Journalist Club in Berlin------------------------------------------------------------Kommentar:
VICE-CHANCELLOR Sigmar Gabriel is next in line to take over from Angela Merkel pending the outcome of the election next year. I think no further comments are necessary!

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The Otium Post was started as a protection for expat Norwegians located in many parts of the world,covering such important items as pension entitlements,new taxes,bi-lateral agreements with Norway and other countries etc. etc.

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